Facial hair changes a face's apparent proportions more than almost any other grooming choice, because it sits directly on the jawline — the exact measurement that defines whether a face reads as heart in the first place. A heart-shaped face widens at the forehead and temples, narrows through the cheekbones, and tapers to a pointed or narrow chin — the inverse proportion of a triangle shape. Many heart faces also have a slight widow's peak, which reinforces the forehead's visual width.
How It's Grown and Shaped
How it's grown and shaped: Growth kept to 0.5 inches, cheek and neck lines trimmed into crisp, straight edges. Adds a defined, controlled edge without significant added width.
Why It Works
Why it works on a heart jaw: This face shape's jaw reads as "tapers inward significantly compared to the forehead." A beard that is faces needing subtle jaw definition rather than dramatic change directly addresses that starting point. Balance the forehead-to-chin taper by adding volume or width at the jawline and softening or minimizing width at the forehead and temples, which brings the upper and lower face into closer visual proportion.
Where to Be Careful
Where to be careful: Already-square jaws, where a straight-edged beard doubles the angularity — if your jaw already leans that direction, ask your barber to reduce density slightly rather than following the standard shape exactly as described above.